Victims rights groups descended together on NYPD headquarters for the first time Tuesday to give cops a look at what services are available for the victims of rape, assault, domestic violence and other crimes.

“We train our cops to give crime victims the city-wide hotline number for victims of crime, but that can sometimes be a very dry referral unless you know what’s offered at the other end of that phone line,” Deputy Commissioner for Collaborative Policing Susan Herman said. “So this is another way of really demonstrating to officers these are the kind of services that a victim has access to when they call that hotline.”

The groups filled tables in the auditorium at One Police Plaza that was filled with yellow and green balloons in honor of National Crime Victims’ Rights Week as officers made the rounds.

“Sometimes you’re really not aware, even though you’re in DV unit, because you’re so focused on sending everyone to the family justice center that we forget about all the other little agencies that are out there,” said Police Officer Damaris Roman, a Domestic Violence cop. “So coming here opens our eyes to all the other agencies and the services they can provide.”

Groups at the event included Camba, St. Luke’s Roosevelt Crime Victims Treatment Center, the Arab American Family Support Center, Bellevue Hospital’s Victim Services Program and STEPS to End Family Violence.